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Title Page
tep zepi - THE FIRST TIME
EVIDENCE BEFORE THE UNITED STATES SENATE WASHINGTON D.C. JUNE 14, 1960
antarctica
LAT. 67°20’S, LONG. 180°16’W ROSS SEA—OFF THE ROSS ICE SHELF NEW ZEALAND ROSS DEPENDENCY
the eighth day
FULTON CONFERENCE CENTER MAGNOLIA UNIVERSITY, NORTH MISSISSIPPI MARCH 16, 2012
THE BERESOVKA RIVER FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF SIBERIA 7:32 A.M.
connections
42,000 FT SOMEWHERE OVER THE NORTH ATLANTIC CLUB CLASS
cern
SECURITY CLEARANCE LEVEL 3
CHARTS
el-qahira
THE GIZA PLATEAU CAIRO
CERN EXPEDITION PLANS
PAPERWORK 2:01 P.M.
FIRST ORDER OF BUSINESS 2:17 P.M.
amazon
THE PINI PINI RIVER PERU
as above so below
SYMBOLS 2:35 P.M.
ABUL-HOL FATHER OF TERROR ROSETAU
NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPY FIRST RESULTS 5:32 P.M.
THE IBIS CAFÉ 8:15 P.M.
CENTRAL SOLAR OBSERVATORY NETWORK 7:15 P.M.
7:49 P.M.
breakthrough
A CAIRO PENTHOUSE BALCONY 9:30 P.M.
8:03 P.M.
ELIGO EUROPEAN LASER INTERFEROMETER GRAVITATIONAL WAVE OBSERVATORY 10:06 P.M.
THE WELL SHAFT
LIGHT COMPUTER SCIENCE DIVISION CERN, GENEVA
BERTIE’S HOTEL ROOM 101
ELEVEN-MILE MARKER
the fifth wave
GIZA
THE EARTH
SCOTT
CERN
THE SACRED PLACES
expedition
EN ROUTE
CAPE TOWN DOCKS PIER 19
4:16 P.M
sacred places
PINI PINI TUNNELS NIGHT
CROSSED WIRES
PONTIFICAL APOSTOLIC PALACE SECOND FLOOR VATICAN CITY
THE CHAMBERS
SFIORZA’S OFFICE
the first protocol
RETRIEVAL STAGE I
SEAS: ROUGH WEATHER: GALE FORCE 4— RISING SHARPLY
USS HARRY S TRUMAN 1,524 NAUTICAL MILES NORTH OF McMURDO SOUND
CARGO HOLD
V-TOL
mcmurdo sound
MIDNIGHT
PERIODICITY
THE SUN
SOHO III
PROPAGATION
24 hours
REUNION
3:14 A.M.
HERCULES
RETRIEVAL STAGE I
RETRIEVAL STAGE 2
DROP ZONE
Jung chang
TIME TO SOLAR MAXIMUM: 19 HOURS, 23 MINUTES TIME TO CURRENT SOLAR STORM INTERCEPTION: 4 HOURS, 51 MINUTES
REINFORCEMENTS
descent
USS JEFFERSON CITY SSN-759
LATITUDE NINETY
TRUMAN
IGLOO
ICE TUNNELS
FIRE AND ICE
SOLAR STORM
ACROSS THE EARTH
THE PROBLEM
FREE-FALL
kudurru
TIME TO SOLAR MAXIMUM: 13 HOURS, 37 MINUTES
atlantis
CITY LIMITS
TIME TO SOLAR MAXIMUM: 10 HOURS, 13 MINUTES
golem - THE NANOSWARM
CHAIN REACTION
FRONT LINE ANTARCTICA
KEY DECISION
DEFENSIVE MECHANISMS
INVASIVE PROCEDURE
VAR
EVOLUTION
revelation
INNER CITY
BAIT
AMBUSH
SACRIFICE
20 MINUTES
ACT OF GOD
CONTROL CENTER
SURFACE USS JOHN S. MCCAIN DDG-56
FINAL BATTLE
pulsar
ZERO HOUR
SCOTT AND SARAH
STORM FROM THE SUN
PHASE I THE CASIMIR EFFECT
PHASE II QUASICRYSTALLIZATION
IMPACT
PHASE III EXPULSION
coda
AFTERMATH
EASTER SUNDAY
INTERNATIONAL PRAISE FOR decipher
BIBLIOGRAPHY
AUTHOR’S NOTE
Copyright Page
FOR CAMILLE
tep zepi
THE FIRST TIME
AVESTIC ARYANS—PRE-ISLAMIC IRAN—MIDDLE EAST
Ahura Mazda created Airyana Vaejo, the original paradise and birthplace of the Aryan race. There were seven months of summer and five of winter. But after Angra Mainyu, the Evil One, was finished, there were only two months of summer and ten of winter. A mighty serpent, intense cold, thick ice and snow is all that haunts the land now. It is so cold that nothing can survive there. Yima, instead of building an Ark, was ordered to make a Var, an underground place linking the four corners so that specimens of every living thing could be brought there and saved.
Excerpt from: Tales of the Deluge: A Global Report on Cultural Self-Replicating Genesis Myths, Dr. Richard Scott, 2008
EVIDENCE BEFORE THE UNITED STATES SENATE WASHINGTON D.C. JUNE 14, 1960
(Based on actual transcripts)
“If this agreement is approved,” Senator Aiken said as he tapped out his ash from behind a thick veil of blue cigarette smoke, “Antarctica becomes a country without a government. Of course, it doesn’t have too much government now, but no government is provided for Antarctica under any conditions in the future?”
Herman Phleger shuffled through his papers and coughed, hoping to cash in on some spit. He failed. It was a hot, humid day. The brass and maple ceiling fans worked overtime. A whiff of freshly cut grass wafted in from the lawn outside. Manicured, the way mankind intended. And Herman Phleger was forced to cough again.
“Is there a problem, Mr. Phleger?”
“Uh, yes, sir—” Phleger croaked. He looked around for a clerk. Stood.
“Please use the microphone in front of you, Mr. Phleger. I think we’re all agreed we can’t quite hear you.” The Senator’s smile to his colleagues was a craggy one. There was a ripple of humorless laughter from the rest of the committee. It echoed off the wood paneling and around the sparsely populated Congressional hearing room.
Phleger leaned down close to the gadget. The squeal of feedback was painful. “Uh, I could use some more water, Senator.” He straightened his tie and re-took his seat.
Aiken waved at a clerk to take some water over to the State Department’s legal advisor. After all, Herman Phleger was the man who had headed the U.S. delegation at the Conference on Antarctica. He at least deserved a glass of water.
Phleger leaned in close to the microphone again as he adjusted his chair and thanked the Senator. He could almost hear the old bastard’s cogs whirring from across the room. The Red scare. Grab some territory now while we still can. What with Khrushchev still fuming over that U-2 spyplane business back in May and Eisenhower on the defensive, sending 120 planes out to Southeast Asia last Thursday. Yeah, okay, so China and Russia aren’t exactly on speaking terms but that’s playing with fire. Of course Francis Gary Powers was working for the military: everyone in the State Department knew that. Although it wasn’t exactly a lie when the government had tried to say he was flying a “weather” plane. They simply wanted to know “whether” or not the Russians had any missiles in the area.
The clerk set a pitcher of ice water down on the desk. The legal advisor ignored the hissing and popping of exploding ice cubes as he poured himself a glass and gulped down a mouthful.
“Senator,” he said, sighing with relief and mopping at his brow, “the Treaty specifically provides that no one surrenders its claim. There are seven claims which cover eighty percent
of Antarctica: the United Kingdom, France, Argentina, Chile, New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa. You take the sector Argentina and Chile have—they’ve incorporated it into their metropolitan territories and have criminal codes which they claim apply to them, and the same is true with respect to New Zealand. So they do have government in those territories.” So tough shit, Senator, we just weren’t quick enough when it was time to stake a claim. Just be glad the Russkies don’t have a plot either. Phleger coughed again. “So, Senator, there may only be fifty people in the area but they do have governments.”
Aiken was clearly uncomfortable with that thought. He shifted in his chair, like his ass spoke his mind for him. “But after the adoption of this Treaty, would the laws of a dozen countries apply?”
Phleger didn’t need to check his notes. He shook his head. “The Treaty says that the signatories do not give up their claims, but the other signatories like the United States that do not recognize their claims do not by the Treaty recognize the claims and their position of non-recognition.” There, that ought to confuse the old buzzard. It did. He watched him shift on his ass again.
Phleger pretended to be impatient. “For instance,” he added, “if there was a commercial man—the Treaty deals with scientists and it deals with military matters …” It was clear Aiken wanted a re-cap on that area. Phleger took another breath.
“Okay,” he said, “if we send a scientist or an inspector into the section claimed by Chile, he can’t be arrested by Chile. Our jurisdiction applies to him no matter where he is in Antarctica—because we made the decision not to recognize other claims to the territory, and because those other claimants made the concession that they would allow our scientists and unarmed military personnel to work within their territory on Antarctica. But, if there should be a mining engineer who went down into the sector claimed by Chile and he got into some trouble, Chile would claim that its laws governed.”
Aiken frowned.
Phleger shifted this time. Was Aiken really that low on short-term memory? “And in that case, Senator,” he explained, “we would claim that Chile’s law did not govern because we do not recognize Chile’s claim, and there would then be an international controversy as to who had jurisdiction over the individual.”
It was double-Dutch. Phleger knew it was double-Dutch. Aiken didn’t appear to know it was double-Dutch, but he didn’t appear not to know either. Which was fine. So long as they were all in agreement. Since in essence, they were merely playing out what the Antarctic Treaty stated, which was: no matter what the claims of a single country over the region known as Antarctica, those claims could be freely ignored by everyone else. Except, and this was an important proviso, except in the case of a military buildup, which, it was agreed, was to be banned by everyone. Totally. Unless, of course, someone infringed upon the rights of the others as set out by the Treaty, in which case—
“We don’t even recognize any claim of our own, do we?” Aiken reiterated.
Phleger almost nodded. He rubbed his chin. This was their “legal” reasoning. “By recognizing that there is no sovereignty over Antarctica we retain jurisdiction over our citizens who go down there and we would deny the right of the other claimants to try that citizen. Yes.”
Aiken sat back in his chair, a crooked grin on his craggy face. That pleased him enormously. He stubbed out his cigarette and immediately reached for another. “Boys, I think we just found one more virtue of the bomb!” There was another ripple of laughter. He was right. Aside from the Soviet Union, who the hell was going to argue with them? You didn’t need to be the first. You needed to be the toughest.
Aiken lit the fresh cigarette and inhaled. He had a curious look on his face. Somber. “Suppose, Mr. Phleger,” he pondered, “that there was a sudden and tremendous demand for emperor penguins?”
“Sir? I’m not sure I’m follow—”
“Penguins, Mr. Phleger. There are serious conservation issues here. What if people went down there and started killing all the emperor penguins? Who could prevent that?”
“The people in each of the geographical areas covered by the seven claimant nations would claim they had a right to protect those penguins.”
“Then suppose one of our boys went into the Chilean area and stole a snow cat. What law would he violate?”
A snow cat?! What on earth was this old buzzard talking about? Snow cats didn’t come from Antarctica. Phleger bit the bullet. “The Chileans apply Chilean law,” he said.
“And we would deny it?”
“We would apply U.S. law and we would have an international controversy.”
“I see.”
“Senator, it doesn’t matter, the reason for the crime. Yes, the environment down there is an issue in the Treaty, but the situations you describe just aren’t covered. We would have to go to mediation over the issue, if it ever arose. We are dealing with an area where we have no territorial claims and this Treaty deals with matters in the international field exclusively. That’s why it’s important that Antarctica remain demilitarized.”
Aiken’s face adopted another grimace. “That’s all well and good, Mr. Phleger, but supposing natural resources of great value were discovered in Antarctica, of value enough so that it would justify an immense cost to exploit them. It might be a vein of diamonds a foot thick.”
Phleger let a sneer cross his face. He was no fan of Aiken, but he was a patriot. “There is no provision in this Treaty which would deal with that situation, Senator. If there was a discovery of value in a sector which was claimed by one of the claimant nations it would naturally claim sovereignty and the right to dictate the manner of exploitation. The United States on the other hand, never having recognized the validity of that claim, is in a position to assert that it has rights in respect thereto. And of course, should someone break the Treaty on demilitarization to protect its claim, the United States may use whatever force is necessary in order to protect the Treaty.”
Aiken smiled. “At least, that’s what we can say.”
“Yes, Senator. We can.”
The Antarctic Treaty was ratified by the U.S. Senate by 66 votes to 21 on August 10, 1960. And that was how the world left it until 1993, when it was agreed that everyone should plow through this shoddy mess one more time. And again it was agreed that apart from the banning of the military and banning the exploitation of mineral wealth in respect to the environment, no country could lay claim to Antarctica.
Which was a dangerous conclusion to reach for a number of reasons, one of which had yet even to be addressed. For it proved that the Antarctic Treaty’s vague double-talk had achieved exactly what it had set out to do: that should it stand as law in the face of overwhelming social change, its basic tenet would remain: that if anything of value were discovered in Antarctica; anarchy would reign supreme.
The Antarctic Treaty guaranteed that even if mankind had any desire to rid itself of the Seven Deadly Sins, Greed had been assured of a place in our hearts by virtue of time. By writing it down on a piece of paper and parading it as law and belief, Greed could be resurrected at a moment’s notice.
That was the beauty of the written word. It was invariably taken at face value and granted permit to be spoken as the truth. It lived longer than the man.
And wreaked havoc in the process.
antarctica
The sacred symbols of the cosmic elements, the secrets of Osiris, had been hidden carefully. Hermes, before his return to the heavens, invoked a spell on them and said, “O holy books which have been made by my immortal hands, by incorruption’s magic spell, remain free from decay throughout eternity and incorrupt by time. Become unseeable, undefinable, from everyone whose foot shall tread the plains of this land, until old Heaven shall bring instruments for you, whom the Creator shall call his souls.” Thus spake he, and laying the spells on them by means of his works, he shut them safe away in their rooms. And long has been the time since they were hid away …
The Virgin of the World
&nbs
p; Taken from the Corpus Hermeticum circa A.D. 100
—REUTERS NEWS Service—8 MARCH, 2012—
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March 8, 2012 09:53:38-0400 / PAGE 7 of 32
Washington D.C.—IPM EST
With reports surfacing of unusual activity in the region of Jung Chang, a Chinese Research Station based 130km west of Mount McKelvey in central Antarctica, Secretary of State Irwin Washler has refused to confirm or deny that the United States placed a counter-offensive task force on standby in the South Pacific this morning. This despite confirmed sightings of 6 US warships heading for the Ross Sea. Reports also indicate over 6000 US troops encamped on the Falkland Islands, a British colony in the South Atlantic.
Chinese activity has been under intense scrutiny since NASA’s confirmation of high-quality mineral deposits in the upper Antarctic basin last month and their announcement this week of radiation emissions in the vicinity of the Chinese base. “A vast amount of heat is being generated down there,” said Dr. Charles Taylor, head of the Antarctic Scientific Committee. “We know Antarctica has a lot of volcanic activity, but this is distinct from any geology we know of.” To generate that much heat would require nuclear power, which is banned under the Antarctic Treaty. As one source remarked, “According to these numbers, either they’ve cracked nuclear fusion, or they’ve found a power source of even greater magnitude.”